Icicles and heat pumps in the Arctic north

Photo: Asaf Kliger – NIBE

In the Arctic north of Sweden, the sun barely rises in winter. A hotel has made its freezing location a selling point. Built out of 30,000 m³ of snow and 600 ice blocks each a metre thick from the frozen river, it attracts 70,000 guests a year .  

In addition to two permanent main buildings with warmer areas such as a restaurant and even a sauna, the complex has 54 rooms which are kept at temperatures below freezing, an ice church and many sculptures. 

14 geothermal heat pumps maintain the temperatures, along with a solar system. This allows the hotel to operate year-round, allowing visitors to experience both summer’s midnight sun and winter’s northern lights efficiently. 

More information here.

Have you got a heat pump story to share? Let us know! sarah.azau@ehpa.org

Related articles

1.4 million tonnes of fish per year pass through the Pelagia plant in Norway. After being filleted, ...
Part of the site of Brussels’ abattoir in the gritty Anderlecht district was recently reconverted into a...
A new heat pump factory in Poland will be heated and cooled using ground-source and air-source heat pumps. The...
Fancy a cold one?  The heat pump technology in your fridge already keeps your beverages cool. And now, a UK...